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How Is Beowulf Similar

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One of the more noticeable differences is the shape in which the heroes end their battle in. In light of the repetitive foreshadowing of his death, “Beowulf was foiled / of a glorious victory,” and he succumbed to death after being poisoned by the dragon’s venom (2583). Alternatively, Redcrosse knight survives his skirmish, despite wanting to die in the midst of it: “Death better were, death did he oft desire, / But death will never come, when needes require” (Spenser 28.4-5). Moreover, neither of these heroes would have slain these dragons without assistance, but they do receive different kinds of aid. Redcrosse, with his relation to Holiness, obliviously stumbles upon not only a “Well of Life,” but also a “Tree of Life,” both of which are …show more content…

Foremost, Beowulf is a battle hardy warrior, albeit weary now in his old age, and he recounts many of his legendary feats throughout the poem: “Many a skirmish I survived when I was young / and many times of war,” the king says to his comrades (2426-27). Confronting the dragon head first in its own barrow, Beowulf takes “no coward path,” and in “a storm of anger,” he challenges the beast (2541, 2552). A great show of courage is displayed right in the beginning, as the king knows what must be done, even if it means sacrificing his own life. The Redcrosse knight, on the other hand, with the horror of his enemy built up monumentally over eight stanzas, begins to “quake with feare” before he charges the dragon, who is already disturbed by the knight’s presence (15.8). Perhaps this is a more realistic reaction to encountering a dragon, although it is written a trifle less climatically than Beowulf’s ultimate confrontation.
In comparison to Redcrosse, who, with Una, “gan to highest God entirely pray,” and when he defeated the dragon, “God she

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